To put a few of these speed-oriented Olympic sports in perspective, we decided to race their athletes against a snow leopard. (We picked the snow leopard because the great cat, a vulnerable species native to Central and South Asia, though not South Korea, might feel right at home on the icy slopes of the Winter Olympics courses.) Snow leopards can sprint between 35 and 40 m.p.h. — we averaged that range and rounded up to 38.

As for how fast different Olympians can go in their sports, the figures are all over the place. The most thorough source appears to be The Washington Post‘s accounting based on a variety of winter sport authorities, including the World Curling Federation. Just click or tap “Go” to see which athletes can beat this elegant Panthera in a head-to-head matchup.

(Curling was not including out of consideration for the reader’s time, since it would take about 18 seconds for the poor curler to make it across the screen.)